Thank you all, this thread has been a great help and I guess it would be for any beginner who wants to sing along to their playing.
As my earlier post suggested, I’ve been struggling to sing quite a few songs because I can’t quite get the key right even though the range didn’t seem too far out for me.
Initially before this post I thought a capo was simply used to transpose the key of a song to the way it is “supposed†to be played as intended by the original artist. I didn’t realise you could manipulate the key to suit your vocal range, I had simply never thought about it, to busy practising the guitar I suppose.
Anyway, to the point; I went through my songbook last night and just sung the first verse and chorus of each song, I noticed that all songs which started with and predominantly stay close to E, F or G (plus minors obviously), I was able to sing ok, certainly ok enough to stop the local dogs howling in return!
However I started to struggle on songs which start with and predominantly stay around on A and C (I don’t have that many with B’s but I’d assume they’d be in there too?), so I experimented with the Capo. What I found was songs which start with and predominantly stay around A I needed to Capo on 2, and likewise C I needed to capo on 4.
I concluded that these chords are a little high for me, but I’d have thought I’d need to transpose down rather than up but I guess this is where harmony between certain notes and chords come into the equation.
The funny thing was, songs which start with D seemed ok but I did run out of time so I rushed this. However, this fits in with Kajima when he says most D songs revert to Em and E.
Is this a normal scenario? I guess that A, B and C chords are not too high for me but simply don’t harmonise with my “howl†correctly?? If I sing these songs without a capo, the key of my voice wanders all over the shop until I settle at a pitch that sounds like Michael Jackson with his bits in a vice??
Cheers
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